Colors
Surface Elevation Tint Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A surface elevation tint generator builds a ramp of surface colors that represent depth in a layered interface, where higher elevation means a lighter tint on dark themes and a subtly darker or shadowed tint on light themes. Provide your base surface color and how many levels you need, and it steps the tint evenly so each elevation, from the page background up through cards, menus, and modals, sits a consistent amount above the last. This is how material-style and modern UIs convey that an element floats above the content beneath it without relying solely on drop shadows. Developers and designers use the ramp to assign background colors by elevation, define surface tokens, or keep overlapping panels visually ordered. Each level is a paste-ready hex code. Map level zero to the base surface and climb the ramp as elements rise toward the viewer.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Paste your base surface color.
- Choose how many elevation levels you need.
- Click Generate to build the tint ramp.
- Map level zero to the page and climb as elements rise.
Use Cases
- •Assigning background colors by elevation level
- •Defining surface tokens for a layered theme
- •Ordering overlapping panels and menus by depth
- •Building a material-style elevation system
- •Keeping cards and modals visually distinct from the page
Tips
- →Use level zero as the page background.
- →Step up one level per increase in elevation.
- →Keep the ramp to six or fewer levels for clarity.
- →Combine tints with subtle shadows on light themes.
FAQ
why do higher surfaces get lighter on dark themes
On dark UIs, drop shadows are hard to see, so elevation is shown by lightening the surface tint instead. A higher element gets a lighter overlay, reading as closer to a light source and therefore raised.
how many levels should i use
Most interfaces need three to six elevation levels covering the base, cards, sticky bars, menus, and modals. More than that and the steps become hard to tell apart, so keep the ramp focused.
does this replace drop shadows
It complements them. Tints carry most of the elevation cue on dark themes, while shadows still help on light themes. Combine a tint step with a subtle shadow for the clearest sense of depth.
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